Title: Introduction to Criminal Justice
1Introduction to Criminal Justice
- Explaining Crime
- Chapter Three
- Bohm and Haley
2Theory
- A theory is an assumption (or set of assumptions)
- that attempts to explain why or how
- things are related to each other.
- A theory of crime attempts to explain
- why or how a certain thing or certain things
- are related to crime and criminal behavior.
- Key word Causation
3From Classical Choice Theories to Modern Rational
Choice Views(Beccaria)
- The basis of this perspective over time has dealt
with four key relationships - 1) Law
- 2) Crime
- 3) Punishment
- 4) Deterrence
4Core Concepts of Choice or Classical Criminology
5Structuring Crime(Classical Theory)
- Not only do criminals structure their career but
they rationally choose - The type of crime to commit
- Where it occurs
- Who or what will be the target
- The time the crime will be committed
6Question
- Do you think that a criminal act
- is a matter of rational choice?
- In order for behavior to be rational -
- should behavior be learned first,
- in order to make a structured choice of crime?
7How Are These Behaviors the Product of Rational
Thought?
- Street Crime
- Drug Use
- Violence
8Deterrence
- The punishment philosophy that says
- punishments aim
- is
- to prevent future offenses
- by setting an example
- for both the offender and others
- i.e., specific and general deterrence.
9General Deterrence
- The version of deterrence that seeks to
- prevent crime by using punishment to show others
who are considering a criminal act - that they will suffer painful consequences
- if they commit that act.
10Specific Deterrence
- The version of deterrence that seeks to prevent
crime by using punishment to show the criminal
that the criminal act was undesirable because it
brought more pain than pleasure. - Possible problems include
- Chronic offenders may increase their rate of
offending or defiance. - Juveniles may experience leniency in punishment.
- The effect of specific deterrence as a punishment
strategy is uncertain.
11Foundations of Biological Trait Theory
- The biological explanation of criminal behavior
first became popular during the middle part of
the 19th Century with the introduction of
positivism. - What is positivism?
12Positivism
- Positivism rejects the concept of free will.
- Positivism assumes that human behavior is
determined. - Crime can only be understood if it is studied by
the scientific method (cause and effect). - Human behavior is a function of internal and
external forces multiple factors, i.e., social,
biological, psychological, or socio-economic
forces.
13Early Positivists
- Early positivists included
- Lombroso (belief that certain physical
characteristics indicate a criminal nature). -
- Garofalo (certain physical characteristics and
psychological characteristics indicate criminal
nature). - Ferri (belief in biological, social and organic
factors as a cause of crime and delinquency). - Sheldon (belief in body types which were
susceptible to certain types of delinquent
behavior).
14TRAIT THEORIES(Positivist Approach)
- Trait theories are made up of biosocial and
psychological theories. - The primary focus of trait theories is human
behavior and the link to - anti-social behavior, i.e., aggression,
violence, and criminality.
15Biological and Psychological Traits
- Both biological and psychological traits have
been linked to criminal behavior, but not as
causal linkages. - It is the multiple factor approach or the
interaction of mental and physical traits with
environmental and social factors that either
suppress or trigger criminal behavior. - The focus is generally on persistent or chronic
offenders.
16Biosocial Trait Theories
- Biochemical Conditions and Crime
- Neurophysiological Conditions and Crime
- Genetics and Crime
- Evolutionary Views and Crime
17PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAIT THEORIES(Freud)
- Psychodynamic
- Behavioral
- Cognitive
- Social Learning
- Mental Illness and crime
- Personality and Crime
- Intelligence and Crime
18Personality and Crime - Trait
Personality can be defined as the reasonably
stable patterns of behavior, including thoughts
and emotions that distinguish one person from
another. Personality reflects a characteristic
way of adapting to lifes demands and problems.
Psychopaths
Sociopaths
Anti-Social Personalities I Abnormal Affect
19SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES(Positivist Approach)
- Criminal Behavior Patterns
- Are Affected By
- Places - Places not people cause crime, i.e.,
deteriorated lower-class areas. - Socioeconomic placement in society can influence
the potential for criminal behavior, i.e., unable
to attain social or economic success.
20Sociological TheoriesThe Underlying Premise
- The real crime problem is a lower class
phenomenon. - Those that live in equivalent social environments
tend to behave in a predictable fashion. If the
environment did not affect human behavior, then
crime rates would be dispersed equally across the
social structure.
21ELEMENTS OFSOCIAL DISORGANIZATION THEORY(Shaw
and McKay)
- Poverty
- Social Disorganization
- Breakdown of Social Control
- Criminal Areas
- Cultural Transmission
- Criminal Careers
22STRAIN THEORIES
- Crime is a direct result of the
- frustration and anger of the lower-class
- to achieve culturally defined goals, i.e.,
wealth, success, power - however,
- the means to acquire these goals
- are stymied by the stratification
- of class and status in society.
23ANOMIE
- Durkheim Norms have broken down because of
rapid social change, i.e., traditions and values. - Merton Culturally defined goals and socially
approved means for obtaining them have broken
down, i.e., education and hard work. - Messner and Rosenfeld The American Dream as a
goal and a process. Crime becomes the strategy
for attaining wealth.
24Cultural Deviance TheoryCohens Theory of
Delinquent Subcultures
25Cultural Deviance TheoryCloward and Ohlins
Theory of Differential Opportunity
MAJOR PREMISE Blockage of conventional
opportunities causes lower-class youths to join
criminal, conflict, or retreatist gangs.
STRENGTHS Shows that even illegal opportunities
are structured in society. Indicates why people
become involved in a particular type of criminal
activity. Presents a way of preventing crime by
providing the means for juveniles to obtain
success.
26The goal of social conflict theorists is to
explain crime within economic and social contexts
and to express the connections among social
class, crime and social control. Crime is an
outcome of class struggle. Issues of concern to
them include
- The role government plays in creating a
criminogenic environment. - The relationship of personal or group power in
controlling and shaping the criminal law. - The role of bias in the operations of the justice
system. - The relationship between a capitalist
free-enterprise economy and crime rates.
27Conflict Theory(Vold andTurk)
STRENGTHS Accounts for class differentials in the
crime rate. Shows how class conflict influences
behavior.
MAJOR PREMISE Crime is a function of class
conflict. The definition of the law is controlled
by people who hold social and political power.
28Marxist Theory(Radical Theory)
MAJOR PREMISE The capitalist means of production
creates class conflict. Crime is a rebellion of
the lower class. The criminal justice system is
an agent of class warfare.
STRENGTHS Accounts for the associations between
economic structure and crime rates.
29Social Conflict TheoriesDeconstructionism
(Postmodernists)
MAJOR PREMISE Language controls the meaning and
use of the law.
STRENGTHS Provides a critical analysis of
meaning.
30Social Conflict TheoriesPeacemaking
Restorative Justice
31Social Learning TheoryDifferential Association
- Sutherland and Cressey.
- Criminal behavior and criminal techniques are
learned. Learned behavior is a byproduct of
interacting with others. - Learned behavior begins when a person is in their
adolescence from close friends and relatives. - Criminal behavior occurs when the definitions
toward crime outweigh the definitions against
crime.
32Social Control Theories
- Reckless containment theory a strong
self-image insulates a youth from crimogenic
influences. - Hirshis social bond theory onset of
criminality is linked to the weakening of social
ties or bonds.
33Elements of the Social Bond
34Hirschis Control Theory
MAJOR PREMISE A persons bond to society prevents
him or her from violating social rules. If the
bond weakens, the person is free to commit crime.
STRENGTHS Explains the onset of crime can apply
to both middle- and lower-class crime. Explains
its theoretical constructs adequately so they can
be measured. Has been empirically tested.
35LABELING THEORY(Edwin Lemert)
- This theory holds that
- criminality is promoted by
- becoming negatively labeled
- by significant others.
- Key Word Secondary Deviance
36Labeling Theory The Basis for Self-Concept
Decision to Label
Initial Criminal Act
Detection by the Justice System
Creation of a New Identity
Acceptance of Labels
Deviance Amplification